HarryChaote
New Member
Hello.
I finally found the courage to actually ask in some kind of community...
I hope I'm using the correct category, since it's not a true laptop, but a M. Surface style convertible with detachable keyboard.
I'm in a bit of a sticky situation. I own a Lenovo Ideapad Duet 3, type 11IAN8 (the Windows version, not the Chrome OS version, as I have learned both exist)
I'm not picky about Linux distros, I would just like to be able to swap from Windows. (I used several flavours of Ubuntu, Mint, Manjaro, Fedora from what I remember, on various computers over many years - my first distant memory is Ubuntu Lucid Lynx)
I attempted to install Linux on it, but that was many months ago, maybe a year, and my efforts were futile.
I would like to gather some information before the attempt No.2, since it was a somewhat traumatizing experience.
There are some articles and posts about Duet 3 being great with Linux, but that is most probably the Chromebook version, since they named several slightly different devices the same name for whatever reason.
OSes tested:
Tried several of the major Linux branches to see what differs.
Ubuntu, Mint
Fedora
OpenSUSE
Manjaro, Arch (I failed to install Arch, so I guess that was the limit of my Linux-installation-skills at that point)
What had happened:
I did manage to boot from usb stick.
The system was in portrait mode.
After installation, no matter the system, it failed to boot.
Afterwards I learned that this was caused by the UFS harddrive (this machine contains the Samsung KLUDG4UHGC-B0E1, using UFS 3.1)
I managed to rewrite few lines in the kernel to allow the system to boot from UFS, following a tutorial.
It booted in portrait mode. (again)
While trying to fix the orientation of both the display and the touch panel, and several other different issues, I used the stylus to test it, which caused the system to freeze and crash.
I repeated the attempt with all of the distros mentioned above, getting some identical, and some varied issues.
At this moment I realized I am probably not capable to put Linux on this machine, and very relucantly reverted to Windows.
What I'm looking for:
A distribution that could be installed and working reasonably well. Which one, doesn't matter much at this point.
I'm willing to put up significant effort to make it running, if it would work.
I'd like the stylus to work and to be able to use external document scanner, since I'm using my computer for art.
Questions:
Does anyone here have experience with this machine and/or UFS drives? (Did anything change in last months?)
Would something based on Gentoo have bigger chance for success? (I didn't try that one yet, and it intimidates me. I only have some very fuzzy knowledge that it's very flexible, but no idea if this isn't a dead end)
Related to the first question, is it actually possible to make this convertible work with Linux, or are the compatibility issues, proprietary drivers, weird hardware choices, a too tough nut to crack?
All in all... I'm going to continue my research in parallel to posting this.
I just need perhaps a few pointers, I'm willing to do the work here. (I just want to avoid another full week of hitting the walls with messed up machine to worry about)
Thanks to anyone who'd look into this.
I finally found the courage to actually ask in some kind of community...
I hope I'm using the correct category, since it's not a true laptop, but a M. Surface style convertible with detachable keyboard.
I'm in a bit of a sticky situation. I own a Lenovo Ideapad Duet 3, type 11IAN8 (the Windows version, not the Chrome OS version, as I have learned both exist)
I'm not picky about Linux distros, I would just like to be able to swap from Windows. (I used several flavours of Ubuntu, Mint, Manjaro, Fedora from what I remember, on various computers over many years - my first distant memory is Ubuntu Lucid Lynx)
I attempted to install Linux on it, but that was many months ago, maybe a year, and my efforts were futile.
I would like to gather some information before the attempt No.2, since it was a somewhat traumatizing experience.
There are some articles and posts about Duet 3 being great with Linux, but that is most probably the Chromebook version, since they named several slightly different devices the same name for whatever reason.
OSes tested:
Tried several of the major Linux branches to see what differs.
Ubuntu, Mint
Fedora
OpenSUSE
Manjaro, Arch (I failed to install Arch, so I guess that was the limit of my Linux-installation-skills at that point)
What had happened:
I did manage to boot from usb stick.
The system was in portrait mode.
After installation, no matter the system, it failed to boot.
Afterwards I learned that this was caused by the UFS harddrive (this machine contains the Samsung KLUDG4UHGC-B0E1, using UFS 3.1)
I managed to rewrite few lines in the kernel to allow the system to boot from UFS, following a tutorial.
It booted in portrait mode. (again)
While trying to fix the orientation of both the display and the touch panel, and several other different issues, I used the stylus to test it, which caused the system to freeze and crash.
I repeated the attempt with all of the distros mentioned above, getting some identical, and some varied issues.
At this moment I realized I am probably not capable to put Linux on this machine, and very relucantly reverted to Windows.
What I'm looking for:
A distribution that could be installed and working reasonably well. Which one, doesn't matter much at this point.
I'm willing to put up significant effort to make it running, if it would work.
I'd like the stylus to work and to be able to use external document scanner, since I'm using my computer for art.
Questions:
Does anyone here have experience with this machine and/or UFS drives? (Did anything change in last months?)
Would something based on Gentoo have bigger chance for success? (I didn't try that one yet, and it intimidates me. I only have some very fuzzy knowledge that it's very flexible, but no idea if this isn't a dead end)
Related to the first question, is it actually possible to make this convertible work with Linux, or are the compatibility issues, proprietary drivers, weird hardware choices, a too tough nut to crack?
All in all... I'm going to continue my research in parallel to posting this.
I just need perhaps a few pointers, I'm willing to do the work here. (I just want to avoid another full week of hitting the walls with messed up machine to worry about)
Thanks to anyone who'd look into this.
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